Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Abdul Rasheed Baloch

 



Rasheed Baloch (born April 7, 1972) is an Olympian & professional Pakistani Boxer. As an amateur, he was one of the best to ever come from Pakistan and was the Pakistan captain from 1997 to 1998. He took part in the 1996 Olympic games he won his first fight against a Mexican Boxer & lost 2nd match against Kazakhstan Boxer in 67 kg.
In the previous year he took (Silver) in the South Asian Games.(Gold) in Agon Cup Malaysia, Quaid-i-Azam International Cup(Gold)KESC Cup (silver)Cardin Cup Cuba (Bronze)Green Hill Cup (Silver), Having a successful amateur career, he moved to Japan and turned pro in 1999. Rasheed fought Joel Burke for the NSW Middleweight Title in 2001 which he won by TKO 5th round.
He went on to fight for the vacant OBA light middleweight title against John Wayne Parr but lost cause of broken right hand.
(Pakistan champion 1993-1998) (National Games 1997-98) (7th Saf Games India 1995) (Agon Cup Malaysia 1995) (China Cup China 1995) (KESC International cup 1995) (9th Mayor's cup Philippines 1996) (Cardin Cup Cuba 1996) (Atlanta Olympics 1996) (Asian Championship Malaysia 1997) (10th Mayor's Cup Philippines 1998) (Green Hill Cup Pakistan 1998) (Asian Games Thailand 1998)


Boxing record
Total fights 116
Wins 98
Wins by KO 85
Losses 18
Draws 0








Sunday, 15 March 2015

 16 BASIC BOXING TIPS


A quick list of 16 basic boxing tips your trainer should have told you. These boxing tips will improve your boxing training, boxing punching, and boxing defense. Goodluck!


TRAINING TIPS:
  1. Stay calm and punch lighter on the bag so you can last more rounds, keep your form together, and punch sharp. This will allow you to get in more minutes of quality bagwork. You want to have energy to hit the bag with correct form and keep your punches snappy, instead of spending most of your bagwork panting and huffing to show that you have “heart”. Don’t waste energy showing off on the bag – nobody cares.
  2. Don’t workout till complete failure. Get tired, break a sweat, and just push yourself a little more each day. If you go until failure everyday of the week without a reason, you’ll probably overtrain and quit boxing very soon.
  3. Drink lots of water. One cup every hour minimum!
  4. Make friends in the gym, be humble, and ask people for boxing tips. When another boxer beats you, ask him how he did it; you may be surprised at how helpful he might be at showing you your own weaknesses.

PUNCHING TIPS:
  1. Turn your whole body into the punch. If your feet are slow, (most people have slow feet at first) you will find that punching a little slower actually hits harder than punching faster. So in other words, punch as fast as your body can turn so you won’t sacrifice power. Again, use your whole body instead of just the arms to punch.
  2. Throw short hooks, short uppercuts, and short rights but long jabs.
  3. You don’t always have to throw one knockout punch after another. Combo light and hard punches and use head movement to fake out your opponent. Remember that the harder you try, they harder they will counter, and the harder you will get hurt. Calm down and throw the hard punches when you know they’ll land.
  4. Never forget to go to the body. Try a jab to the head, and right hand to the body. When you’re in real close, lean your head inside to smother him and throw 2-3 body punches.
  5. Throw 3-5 punch combos maximum. You don’t need 10-punch combos – all those do is sap your energy and leave you open to counters. Don’t even practice these for now.
  6. Breathe out when you punch and always look at your target when you punch. Don’t hold your breath and don’t look at the ground. Learn to keep your eyes open during the heat of the battle!
  7. Let your hands go! Don’t wait around forever to let your opponent hit you all day. Throw something even if it doesn’t land. Keep him thinking and keep your eyes open for more punching opportunities.

DEFENSE TIPS:
  1. Stay calm and never stop breathing. If you’re starting to panic, ask the other guy to slow down so your mind and body can catch up.
  2. Hold your hands high, elbows low, and move your head.
  3. Don’t waste energy running around the ring, just take one step and pivot out of the way if your opponent is overly aggressive. Think of yourself as a matador pivoting out of the way as the bull misses. Don’t forget to hit him back.
  4. Don’t lean back and don’t take your eyes off your opponent when you’re taking punches (this is especially hard for most beginners). Establish your ground and defend it with hard counters. Pivot so that you don’t get countered.
  5. Don’t always wait for your opponent to finish punching before you start punching back. Interrupt his combos and hit him! Too many speedy fighters get caught up in trying to block all the oncoming punches that they never get to counter. Let your hands go!